Anbieter: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 5,31
Anzahl: 4 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. pp. 68.
Verlag: Isha Books
ISBN 10: 9333649301 ISBN 13: 9789333649308
Anbieter: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 7,25
Anzahl: 4 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. pp. 68.
Anbieter: Majestic Books, Hounslow, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 7,69
Anzahl: 4 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbZustand: New. pp. 34.
HRD. Zustand: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Anbieter: PBShop.store UK, Fairford, GLOS, Vereinigtes Königreich
EUR 20,96
Anzahl: 15 verfügbar
In den WarenkorbHRD. Zustand: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000.
Verlag: Apud Io. Antonium Remondinum, Bassani
Anbieter: Minotavros Books, ABAC ILAB, Whitby, ON, Kanada
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. No Jacket. 8vo (small). N.d., [1686?] Quarter calf, marbled paper boards, gilt title and decoration to spine. 308, [42], 72 pp. Separate engraved titles. Woodcut ornaments and initials. Rubbing to leather and boards, worn to edges. Ink staining to edges of text block. Occasional light staining, some worming to upper margins with some minor loss. A full account of the Council of Trent, with the "Index librorum prohibitorum" included at the end. 0.
Verlag: Roma, ex typographia Camerae Apostolicae, Roma, 1632
Anbieter: Libreria Alberto Govi di F. Govi Sas, Modena, MO, Italien
Zustand: Buono (Good). THE MONITUM AD NICOLAI COPERNICI LECTOREMThree parts in one volume, 12mo (145x75 mm). Contemporary limp vellum, inked title along the spine (slightly darkened and rubbed). I: [8], 679, [1 blank] pp. Collation: a4 A-Ee12 Ff4. Woodcut coat-of-arms of Pope Urban VIII on title page; II: 98 pp. Collation: A-D12 E1. Woodcut coat-of-arms of Pope Clemens VIII on title page; III: 99-175, [1 blank] pp. Collation: E2-8 F-G8 H4. Woodcut coat-of-arms of Pope Urban VIII on title page. Parts 2 and 3 are reprints respectively of the 1596 Index librorum prohibitorum and the 1624 Librorum post indicem Clementis VIII prohibitorum, including the original title pages. Occasional light marginal staining, slightly uniformly browned throughout, more strongly in places, but all in all a very good, genuine copy, untouched in its original binging.First edition of the Tridentine and Clementine indexes of prohibited books and subsequent decrees up to 1629 edited and arranged in alphabetical order by Francesco Capiferro Maddaleni and by him dedicated to Pope Urban VIII.?In 1632, Magdalenus issued in Rome, under the title Elenchus librorum omnium tum in Tridentino, Clementinoq. indice, tum in alijs omnibus Sacrae Indicis Congreg.nis particularibus decretis hactenus prohibitorum, what appears to have been a freshly compiled Index. This Elenchus of Magdalenus was, in the same year, reprinted in Milan, with the omission of the series of decrees; and in 1640, a second reprint, containing additional lists, was issued in Rome. Mendham speaks of this Elenchus as if it were a personal and unofficial undertaking; but as Reusch points out, it was issued with the approval and the authority of the Congregation [?] This Index is chiefly intended, as is indicated in the preface, to facilitate reference by writing under one alphabet the divisions of the original Indexes, and by giving surnames as well as Christian names? (G.H. Putnam, Censorship of the Church of Rome and its Influence upon the Production and Distribution of Literature, New York, 1906, I, pp. 268 and 293).Capiferro Maddaleni's index is thus based on previous indexes and in particular that printed in Rome in 1530, but arranged in a single alphabetical order with the writers listed under both their first name and surname, the anonymous writings under various catchwords, and each entry accompanied by the date of the corresponding index or decree. This arrangement considered by Capiferro more practical than that according to classes, was subsequently used also by other editors of indexes of prohibited books (cf. Fr.H. Reusch, Der Index der verbotenen Bücher, Bonn, 1885, II.1, pp. 24-26).The third part of the volume contains all the decrees of the Congregation of the Index issued between 1596 and 1629, including the decree dated March 5, 1616 (pp. 132-133), the first signed by Capiferro Maddaleni as secretary of the Congregation, in which Copernicus' De Revolutionibus was suspended donec corrigatur, and the Lettera sopra l'opinione de' Pittagorici, e del Copernico della mobilità della terra, e stabilità del sole (Naples, 1615) by the Carmelite Paolo Antonio Foscarini (1565-1616) was immediately prohibited and condemned. It also contains the famous Monitum ad Nicolai Copernici lectorem (pp. 144-146), a decree issued by Capiferro Maddaleni on May 15th, 1620, and first appeared in the first edition of the Librorum post Indicem Clementis VIII prohibitorum Decreta omnia hactenus edita (Rome, 1624, pp. 93-94), in which permission is given to reprint the work of Copernicus with ten emendations to the text, and, by implication, to read existing copies after correction of those ten passages. The Monitum, of which no manuscript minute in the archive of the Congregation is extant and of which no separate printed edition has been found, also includes a ban on all books promoting the heliocentric theory: ?libri omnes docents mobilitatem Terrae, & immobilitatem Solis? This ban will be reprinted in all. Book.
Verlag: Petri Rigaud, Lugduni, 1613
Anbieter: studio bibliografico pera s.a.s., LUCCA, LU, Italien
Copertina rigida. Zustand: Discreto. Testo latino. Cm.17x11. Pg.(24), 224, (32). Legatura in piena pergamena molle, con titoli manoscritti al dorso. Vecchi marginali aloni che non inficiano minimamente la fruibilità del testo. In fine, con frontespizio e numerazione di pagine autonoma (ma sempre Lione, Rigaud, 1613), è aggiunto "Index Librorum Prohibitorum, cum Regulis confectis per Patres à Tridentina Synodo delectos: Auctoritate Pij IV primum editus. Postea verò à Sixto V auctus, et nunc demùm Clementis Papae VIII iussu recognitus, & publicatus". Instructione adiecta, de exequendae prohibitionis, déque sinceré emendandi, & imprimendi libros ratione". Pg.72. 250 gr.
Anbieter: Antiquariaat Wim de Goeij, Kalmthout, ANTW, Belgien
Verbandsmitglied: ILAB
Romae (Roma), 1770, Ex Typographia Rev. Cameræ Apostholicæ, xxxxviii pp + 320 pp + 13 pp (supplement). Bound in contemporary full roan ; with title label on spine ( only partially preserved); leather of binding is worn and scratched but binding is technically in good order. Marbled edges, interior fine, no provenance indication.
Anbieter: Penka Rare Books and Archives, ILAB, Berlin, Deutschland
Erstausgabe
Prague: Typis Joannis Caroli Hraba (Jan Karel Hraba), [1770]. Second Edition. Octavo (17.9 ? 10.8 cm). Contemporary calf over five raised bands; decorative label to spine; marbled endpapers; 316, [IV] pp. Lacking the [80] pp. preface. Boards lightly worn and scuffed; front hinge cracked at top (ca. 4 cm); else internally good. The broadside a single leaf, printed to recto and verso; old folds; spotting; else good. Second edition of this index of Protestant and anti-Catholic literature meant to be confiscated and burned. The book is a continuation of the radical Jesuit priest's earlier works, such as the famous "Clavis haeresim claudens et aperiens. Klj? Kac??sk? B?udy K rozezn?nj otwjragic? | K wyko?en?nj zamjtagic?." [A key to identifying and eradicating heretical mistakes. Or Index of certain heretical, scandalous, suspicious or prohibited books?], first published in 1729. This book also urged regular searches of printing shops, libraries, and bookstores, and was the first such index issued for the Czech lands. The present work was more direct in its condemnation of suspect literature and its insistence that such works be removed and destroyed. Because Koni?'s works often holds the only available information on many listed books, he has acquired the ironic fame of the founder of Czech bibliography. More ironically still, his father had been a famous Bohemian printer. Koni? excesses were surely exaggerated by the Communists? anti-Catholic propaganda, but he was known for zealously altering and destroying books deemed heretical (he reportedly boasted of burning 30.000 volumes himself). It is said that he preached five times a day, often collapsing from exhaustion, and eagerly collected parishioners? ?sinful? books, handing out theologically sound literature instead. Whatever the truth of these claims, this and other indexes played a key role in marginalizing Czech culture and literature of this period of counter-reformation. The ?Key either entirely or at least in part condemned almost all Czech writings from the years 1414?1620, and ordered all Czech exile literature, that is Hussite, Brethren, Lutheran, Calvinist, and Pietist books either to be utterly ?rooted out? or else rectified? (cited in Derek Sayer, The Coasts of Bohemia, p. 49). As a result, the Czech language itself continued to be displaced and practically fell into disuse until its ?revival? in the nineteenth century. We cannot trace any holdings of the broadside, which is not attributed, but possibly also by Koni? As of January 2024, we can trace five holdings in North America of the first edition (1767). The present second edition is only held in the Czech Republic and Germany.